Blog

#breathefreely- How polluted is Nepal? Tell us.

Published July 23, 2017

Looking at old photos of Nepal makes me strangely nostalgic of a past I never saw. Pristine hills and mountains, clear blue skies, acres upon acres of greenery, the list pretty much goes on. While parts of the country still remains intact in its natural beauty, the same cannot be said for our cities. Rampant urban development have turned our major cities into dust bowls, with Kathmandu being impacted the most, and earning itself the most unfortunate nickname: Dustmandu.

Malnutrition data shows we are building Nepal on crumbling foundations

Published July 22, 2017

Children are considered to be the foundation that the future of a nation rests upon. Only a proper investment in today’s children will bring us a better tomorrow. 

Mentality and Infrastructure both need to be improved: Kathmandu City

Published June 26, 2017

Like every morning, I was going through my Twitter account. One hand on a cup of tea and another hand on a mobile because Twitter always got some really cool stuff.

While going through Tweets, I saw this: “Welcome to #Kathmandu SEE graduates !!” by Saugat Gautam and the Tweet quoting

“काठमाडौँ तयार भएर बस् । फेरी कैयौ एस.इ.इ. पास भएका सपनाहरु डसनामा पोको पर्दै तेरो कंक्रिटको जंगलमा डेरा खोज्न आउदै छन् ।”

Tweet was saying capital city Kathmandu to be prepared to welcome Secondary Education Examination graduates. A sentiment we hear every year after the result of SEE (previously known as SLC). Kathmandu is the preferred destination of every school graduates, not because students love studying here but because they lack a good education infrastructure in their home districts. Some districts don’t have good schools and teachers, let’s forget about colleges and universities.

Many people argue that the education system needs to decentralize all over Nepal (from developed to undeveloped) and the aim of new Federal Structure also plans to reduce all these things through sustainable development, but still, there are lots of question raised about the structure and constitution implementation itself.

Since, my hometown is Kathmandu, I rarely feel proud of it. It’s populated, polluted, busy. Kathmandu is pretty unmanaged in my view. After seeing that Tweet, my interest in knowing more about my district increased.

I browsed NepalMap, a project of Code for Nepal and searched Kathmandu District to analyze the power and weakness of my home district.

With 1,744,240 current Population according to National Population and Housing Census 2011, Kathmandu is one of the densely populated districts of Nepal. The reason for this are higher education, employment opportunity, only international airport and the capital city. The projected population of the city by 2031 is 2,729,056.

Interested in learning coding? Apply for Tech Diversity Scholarship by July 5

Published June 11, 2017

We are very excited to announce Tech Diversity Scholarship to award selected recipients with the opportunity to attend a 12-week web development course with a mandatory 3-week capstone project. The programming boot camp is made possible by Nepal Telecom and with the partnership with Insight Workshop.

Meet Susan Sunuwar – a recipient of the Women in Tech Scholarship

Published June 02, 2017

Meet our first recipient of the Code for Nepal Women in Tech Scholarship!